Current research degree projects
Explore our current postgraduate research degree and PhD opportunities.
Explore our current postgraduate research degree and PhD opportunities.
This project will pioneer ultra-stable, low-noise fibre lasers engineering for next-generation quantum technologies. By combining innovative cavity design, thermal control, and frequency stabilization, you'll develop compact, high-performance laser systems crucial for quantum sensing, secure communications, and advanced photonic computing platforms.
Binaries containing white dwarfs, neutron stars or black holes produce many key astrophysical systems, from supernovae to merging black holes. However, their long-term evolution remains poorly understood. In this project, you will develop a next-generation framework for determining the evolution compact binaries using the latest theoretical, observational and computational developments.
The detection of gravitational waves (GWs) has been a huge breakthrough in physics. Today's GW detectors are located on Earth, but the next big milestone will be a space-based GW observatory called "LISA". In this project, we will study a crucial, but overlooked, GW source population for LISA: contact binaries.
Supermassive black holes in quasars control the growth of their host galaxies by driving powerful outflows from the disks that surround them. Despite their importance, we know almost nothing about these disk winds. In this project, You will construct a physical picture of quasar outflows by modelling their observational signatures.
The aim of this project is to build the next generation of optical backbone for artificial intelligence (AI) hardware, computing and quantum technologies. You’ll design, fabricate and test silicon photonic circuits for ultra-fast data-links, gaining hands-on experience in cleanroom processes, simulation and characterisation within a world-leading silicon photonics group and in collaboration with industry partners.